| Literature DB >> 31384477 |
Britt Frisk Pados1, Suzanne M Thoyre2, Kara Galer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early identification of feeding difficulty in infancy is critical to supporting breastfeeding and ensuring optimal nutrition for brain development. The Neonatal Eating Assessment Tool (NeoEAT) is a parent-report assessment that currently has two versions: NeoEAT - Breastfeeding and NeoEAT - Bottle-feeding for use in breast and bottle-fed infants, respectively. There are currently no valid and reliable parent-report measures to assess feeding through a combination of both breast and bottle delivery. The purpose of this study was to conduct a factor analysis and test the psychometric properties of a new measure, the NeoEAT - Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-Feeding (NeoEAT - Mixed Feeding), including internal consistency reliability, test-retest reliability, construct validity and known-groups validity.Entities:
Keywords: Bottle feeding; Breast feeding; Feeding behavior; Patient reported outcome measures; Psychometrics; Surveys and questionnaires
Year: 2019 PMID: 31384477 PMCID: PMC6668191 DOI: 10.1186/s40748-019-0107-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Health Neonatol Perinatol ISSN: 2054-958X
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRIMSA) diagram of literature search results. Diagram retrieved from: http://prisma-statement.org/PRISMAStatement/FlowDiagram.aspx
Psychometric Properties of Currently Available Tools for the Assessment of Infants who are Both Breast- and Bottle-Feeding
| Tool (Author) | Purpose & intended user | Target population | Items – number & constructs | Reliability | Validity | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internal consistency | Inter-rater | Test-retest | Content | Construct | ||||
| Early Feeding Skills (EFS) [ | Assess oral feeding skills; Clinician-reported (Training available, but not required) | Preterm and term infants birth to 52 weeks post-menstrual age. | 19 items on revised version; Respiratory Regulation, Oral-Motor Function, Swallowing Coordination, Engagement, Physiologic Stability | + | + | NR | * | + |
| Acceptable internal consistency reliability (Cronbach’s α = .81) [ | * Item generation consistent with content validity, but not tested [ | |||||||
| Neonatal Oral Motor Assessment Scale (NOMAS) [ | Describe disorganized and dysfunctional sucking patterns; Clinician-reported (Training Required) | Preterm infants and those with complex medical conditions. | 28 items; Jaw and tongue movement and function | + | + | +/− | NR | +/− |
| Internal consistency reliability acceptable [ | Inconsistent evidence of construct validity with related constructs across studies [ | |||||||
+ = Acceptable reliability/ validity defined as Cronbach’s α > .7 [36], Cohen’s k > .6, ICC > .75, percent agreement > 80% [37], or correlation coefficient (r) > .4 [38]; − = Unacceptable reliability/validity by these definitions; +/− = Mixed findings; * = Description of item generation is consistent with content validity, but no formal testing conducted; NR = Not Reported
Summary of Sex and Age Distribution of Infant Sample
| Corrected age | Sex | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | ||
| 0–2 months | 87 | 89 | 176 (28.9%) |
| 2–4 months | 75 | 100 | 175 (28.8%) |
| 4–6 months | 91 | 92 | 183 (30.1%) |
| 6–7 months | 34 | 40 | 74 (12.2%) |
| Total | 287 (47.2%) | 321 (52.8%) | 608 |
Corrected Age was calculated as the infant’s age on the date of survey completion, adjusting for preterm birth by subtracting the number of weeks the infant was born preterm from current age if the infant was born prior to 37 weeks post-menstrual age
Descriptive statistics for respondents and their infants
| Variable | Frequency ( | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Relationship to Infant ( | ||
| Mother or Mother-Figure | 575 | 94.6% |
| Father or Father-Figure | 28 | 4.6% |
| Other Primary Caregiver | 5 | 0.8% |
| Child Race/Ethnicity ( | ||
| White | 399 | 65.7% |
| Hispanic | 43 | 7.1% |
| Black | 35 | 5.8% |
| Asian | 24 | 4.0% |
| More than one race | 90 | 14.8% |
| Other | 10 | 1.6% |
| Parent Highest Education ( | ||
| High School degree or less | 138 | 22.7% |
| Technical School/Community College | 62 | 10.2% |
| College/University | 206 | 33.9% |
| Graduate School | 202 | 33.2% |
| Household Income ( | ||
| < $20,000 | 49 | 8.1% |
| $20,000 – 39,999 | 112 | 18.5% |
| $40,000 – 59,999 | 102 | 16.9% |
| $60,000 – 79,999 | 92 | 15.2% |
| $80,000 – 99,999 | 57 | 9.4% |
| > $100,000 | 193 | 31.9% |
| Family Type ( | ||
| Two Parent Family | 550 | 90.5% |
| Single Parent Family | 46 | 7.6% |
| Other | 12 | 2.0% |
| Select Infant Conditions ( | ||
| Diagnosed Feeding Problem | 38 | 6.3% |
| Current Feeding Tube | 10 | 1.6% |
| Preterm Birth | 67 | 11.0% |
| Structural Abnormality | 18 | 3.0% |
| Congenital Heart Disease | 18 | 3.0% |
| Genetic Disorder | 5 | 0.8% |
aMultiple conditions could be selected
Final Item Placements and Factor Loadings for Principal Component Analysis with Varimax Rotation of the NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding
| Subscale | NeoEAT – mixed feeding item | Factor loadings |
|---|---|---|
27 items Cronbach’s α .91 | seems uncomfortable after feeding. | .68 |
| spits up in between feedings. | .63 | |
| chokes or coughs during eating. | .62 | |
| is uncomfortable if laid flat after eating. | .60 | |
| becomes stiff/rigid during or after eating. | .59 | |
| throws up in between feedings. | .59 | |
| coughs in between feedings. | .58 | |
| throws up during feeding. | .58 | |
| spits up during feeding. | .57 | |
| is very gassy. | .56 | |
| becomes upset during feeding (whines, cries, gets fussy). | .56 | |
| sounds gurgly or like they need to cough or clear their throat during or after eating. | .56 | |
| coughs or chokes on saliva/spit when not eating. | .55 | |
| arches back during or after eating. | .53 | |
| gags in between feedings when there is nothing in his/her mouth. | .49 | |
| gets a bloated (big or hard) tummy after eating. | .49 | |
| needs to be burped more than once before the end of feeding. | .49 | |
| tilts head back during or after eating. | .48 | |
| gets a stuffy nose when eating. | .45 | |
| gulps when eating (swallows loudly). | .44 | |
| gets the hiccups. | .43 | |
| drools milk out of the side of the mouth when feeding. | .40 | |
| gets watery eyes when eating. | .39 | |
| gets red color around eyes or face when eating. | .39 | |
| gags on a pacifier or toys put in mouth. | .39 | |
| gags on the bottle nipple. | .33 | |
| turns red in face, may cry with stooling/pooping. | .38 | |
11 items Cronbach’s α .86 | eats enough to have at least 5 wet diapers per day (24 h). | .88 |
| is satisfied after eating. | .86 | |
| is easy to console when upset (for example, stops crying when held or offered a pacifier). | .80 | |
| roots when hungry (for example, sucks on fist, smacks lips, looks for breast/bottle). | .79 | |
| is calm and relaxed when eating. | .77 | |
| lets me know when he/she is done eating. | .70 | |
| stools/poops at least once per day (24 h). | .61 | |
| likes to put fingers and/or toys in mouth. | .57 | |
| sucks strong enough to get milk from the bottle. | .53 | |
| sucks strong enough to get milk from the breast. | .42 | |
| sleeps well lying flat on his/her back. | .39 | |
13 items Cronbach’s α .81 | gets exhausted during eating and is not able to finish. | .67 |
| is exhausted after eating. | .56 | |
| can only suck a few times before needing to take a break. | .55 | |
| needs to be encouraged to keep eating (such as, by touching or talking). | .52 | |
| needs tube feedings. | .50 | |
| gets pale or blue color around lips when eating. | .48 | |
| needs to rest during eating to catch his/her breath. | .47 | |
| takes more than 30 min to eat (including rest/burping periods). | .47 | |
| breathes faster or harder when eating. | .45 | |
| holds breath when eating. | .44 | |
| eats more than 12 times per day (24 h). | .37 | |
| wants to eat again within an hour after feeding. | .30 | |
| sweats/gets clammy when eating. | .30 | |
7 items Cronbach’s α .77 | chews or bites on the nipple (bottle) when he/she should be sucking. | .66 |
| will only eat if food (milk/formula/baby food) is a certain temperature. | .66 | |
| will only eat from a specific kind of bottle/nipple. | .62 | |
| will only take the bottle from specific people (such as, by mom). | .57 | |
| refuses the bottle before having eaten enough (such as, turns head, pushes bottle away, pushes nipple out of mouth with tongue). | .54 | |
| needs help latching on to the bottle. | .45 | |
| will only eat if fed in a certain way (for example, in a certain chair, or held upright). | .34 | |
10 items Cronbach’s α .79 | is happy to eat from either the bottle or breast. | .66 |
| will eat expressed breastmilk that has been frozen and reheated. | .65 | |
| needs help latching on to the breast (for example, needs a nipple shield or positioning help). | .59 | |
| refuses the breast before having eaten enough (such as, turns head, pushes breast away, pushes nipple out of mouth with tongue). | .57 | |
| chews or bites on the nipple (breast) when he/she should be sucking. | .56 | |
| has a hard time handling how fast milk comes out of the breast (for example, chokes, coughs, gags, or pulls off the breast). | .56 | |
| prefers bottle-feeding over breastfeeding. | .55 | |
| prefers breastfeeding over bottle-feeding. | .51 | |
| needs a bottle after breastfeeding. | .50 | |
| gags on the breast. | .46 |
Correlation between the NeoEAT-Mixed Feeding, IGERQ-R and IGSQ
| NeoEAT-Mixed Feeding | IGERQ-R sum score ( | IGSQ sum score ( |
|---|---|---|
| Total Score | .57** | .50** |
| Subscale Scores | ||
| | .71** | .61** |
| | −.08* | −.06 |
| | .52** | .45** |
| | .23** | .23** |
| | .08* | .06 |
Pearson product-moment correlations are presented as an r value
*Indicates that the correlation was statistically significant (two-tailed) at p < .05
**Indicates p < .001
IGERQ-R Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire – Revised, IGSQ Infant Gastrointestinal Symptoms Questionnaire
Fig. 2NeoEAT-Mixed Feeding subscale score differences between infants with feeding problems and infants with no feeding concerns. Note that high scores indicate more symptoms of problems in each subscale area. * Indificates p < .05. Infants in the “No Feeding Concerns” group had none of the following: history of preterm birth, genetic disorder, congenital heart disease, daily prescription medication use, developmental delay, diagnose or undiagnose feeding problem, feeding tube, structural abnormality of the face, mouth, or gastrointestinal tract, or difficulty with breast- or – bottle-feeding. Infants with a feeding problem were reported by parents as having a parent-identified feeding problem, a diagnose feeding problem, and/or need for a feeding tube
Summary of the Properties of the NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding
| Tool (Author) | Purpose & intended user | Target population | Items – number & constructs | Reliability | Validity | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internal consistency | Inter-rater | Test-retest | Content | Construct | ||||
| Neonatal Eating Assessment Tool – Mixed Breast –and Bottle-Feeding (NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding) | Assess infant behavior during feeding in infants who are feeding at both breast and bottle; Parent | All infants birth to 7 months old, including those born healthy, full-term, preterm, and with any medical conditions | 68 items; Infant regulation, gastrointestinal tract function, energy & physiologic stability, sensory responsiveness, and feeding flexibility | + | NR | + | + | + |
| Internal consistency- Cronbach’s α = .88 for full scale, Cronbach’s α = .77–.91 for all subscales. Test-retest – | Content validity with 9 professionals – scale level CVI = .90 for clarity and .93 for relevance. Content validated with 19 parents using cognitive interviews [ | |||||||
+Indicates acceptable reliability/validity, − indicates unacceptable reliability/validity
NR Not Reported, CVI Content Validity Index, I-GERQ-R Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire – Revised, IGSQ Infant Gastrointestinal Symptoms Questionnaire. Acceptable reliability and/or validity defined as Cronbach’s α > .7 [36] or correlation coefficient (r) > .4 [38]